Writing advice, publication opportunities, and thoughts on books, language, and life from Donna Volkenannt, winner of the Erma Bombeck Humor Award. Donna believes great stories begin in a writer's imagination and touch a reader's heart.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Elizabeth will be speaking at the quarterly Ozarks Writers League meeting on May 21 at the College of the Ozarks in Hollister, MO, just outside of Branson. For details about Elizabeth's visit to OWL, check out their website.

Thanks to Delois McGrew, president of OWL, and Louella Turner for arranging for my interview.

I e-mailed Elizabeth about a dozen interview questions, which she answered promptly and thoroughly. To give proper space and time to each, I've divided my questions and her answers into five parts.

In Part I of my interview, Elizabeth discusses character, how to fix common writing problems, and shares the names of some of her literary heroes.

Donna: You have been an independent book editor and writing teacher for two decades, and you are the author of six books on writing. As an editor and a teacher, what are some of the most common mistakes writers make that are easily fixable?

Elizabeth: I’ll break my answer down into areas of craft:

Ego—or maybe that isn’t fixable. I had an editing client long ago who contacted me every time a first-time novelist got a giant advance and was a bestseller. “Why not me?” she asked. The unwillingness to eat humble pie and work hard is surprisingly common.

You asked for craft mistakes. Weak scene structure shows up in 90% of the novels I edit. It’s easy to fix and we’ll cover the steps to correct this. Scenes, goal-directed action, make up 80% of most novels. It is fundamental to know how to write them in your sleep. I also like to add how to add a secondary source of suspense that comes from character development. Oh, let’s add a third level from the environment. Hook the reader at multiple levels. We’ll cover this in the workshop.

Two-dimensional characters that come across like cartoons or stereotypes is common weakness. The last character to become interesting in almost every novel I’ve edited is the protagonist. Go figure! Characters begin to become three-dimensional when writers weave in a back story of a traumatic event that wounded the character and gives them a need. Love, respect, self-determination. Reveal snippets of the past and show the character seeking to fill the need and voila—three-dimensional interesting characters.

“Wordsmithing” corrections make giant improvements: Change as many to-be verbs into dynamic past-tense verbs as possible. Kill dead weight—delete as many small, unnecessary prepositional phrases as possible (Ex: to her, as he thought). Get extra style points by adding similes.

Donna: A critique group I belong to frequently discusses the subject of character. One topic of discussion is the “right” number of characters. I’ve heard from one writing teacher that a writer should have no more than 3-5 characters in a short story. Is there a “magic number” of characters for a short story, novel, or even a scene within a story?

Elizabeth: Of course the only accurate answer is “No!” Anything goes with creativity—technically. If you can pull it off, you can break every rule in the book. That said, most writers are not in that league. For short stories, it is difficult to develop three-dimensional characters--3 characters much less 5. I can see having 5, if several are thinly drawn or “bit”. Stick to one point-of-view character for all but literary short stories. For long short stories, you may be able to use a scene break and develop a second point-of-view character.

Novels are a different matter. Limiting viewpoint to one or two characters can help a beginning novelist to gain control over the elements of craft. Three is one of those magical numbers that facilitates triangulation, conflict, and variety. Some genres have many points of view, but I do recommend aiming for no more than 5, in general. Avoid use of omniscient, all-seeing, endless possibilities as a viewpoint.

Donna: Who are your literary heroes?

Elizabeth: For every one author, I would be leaving out a dozen more. I loved Dostoyevsky and Dickens. I am inspired by Ray Bradbury, was thrilled as a child by Andre Norton, and captivated by Frank Herbert. I enjoy Jayne Anne Krentz, J.A. Jance, and Lee Childs. I would choose to be reborn as Barbara Kingsolver. Alice Walker blew me away. I get great laughs from the Devil’s Harbor comic mystery series by my author friend, Carolyn J. Rose. Dean Koontz and Stephen King are master writers, not to be pigeon-holed as horror writers. I just finished Racing in the Rain and loved it.

Check back on Monday for Part II of Elizabeth's interview for a preview of what she'll cover in her May 21 OWL workshop, "From Dust to Diamonds."

"Time Will Tell" in Mysteries of the Ozarks, Vol V, from Ozark Writers Inc.

Some Favorite Quotes

"Grace changes us and change is painful."Flannery O'Connor***"Seek not to understand that you may believe, but believe that you may understand."Saint Augustine**"The two most important days in your life are the day you were born and the day you find out why."Mark Twain**"Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once and a while you could miss it."Ferris Bueller

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